Lew returns to the topic of colonialism and the lies told about it. He then discusses the shameful UN intervention to destroy the new nation of Katanga in Southern Africa, in 1961. The UN propped up a Marxist regime and teamed up with the Congo central government to slaughter whites and blacks alike to prevent an anti-communist, pro-West nation from emerging. While the USSR smuggled armaments to the Marxist Congo government, the U.S. was the principal financer of the UN action.
G. Edward Griffin recounts the entire Katanga tragedy in his great book on the UN, The Fearful Master
00:00:04
FDR,
00:00:05
his socialist new deal, his plotting for war,
00:00:08
his plans for a new order fueled by
00:00:11
alien ideas and aided by communists,
00:00:14
and the rotten origins of today's Democrat party.
00:00:17
Lou Moore tells the story in five episodes
00:00:20
on his show Hour of Decision. Click on
00:00:22
the show logo on Liberty News Radio's website.
00:00:25
It's on the front page at libertynewsradio.com.
00:00:30
This is Lou Moore. Join me each week
00:00:33
on Hour of Decision
00:00:34
where we discuss history, like FDR's history. We
00:00:38
also talk politics
00:00:40
and tactics for committed patriots.
00:00:44
Join Lou Moore for Hour of Decision, Saturday
00:00:46
or Sunday, on Liberty News Radio at 2PM
00:00:49
eastern. Our civilization
00:00:51
is on the line, and this is the
00:00:53
Hour of Decision.
00:00:59
Welcome to the seventy ninth episode
00:01:02
of Hour of Decision.
00:01:04
My name is Lou Moore.
00:01:06
This afternoon, we're gonna talk about
00:01:10
something that was inspired,
00:01:11
in my mind,
00:01:13
by president Trump's little home movie hour
00:01:16
that he had in the Oval Office a
00:01:18
few days ago
00:01:19
with the president of South Africa,
00:01:22
who was coming to the White House to
00:01:25
suck up to president Trump,
00:01:27
to
00:01:29
receive economic aid and mainly
00:01:31
just a continuation
00:01:33
of trade relations without
00:01:35
the tariff issue,
00:01:38
even though that he's also been sucking up
00:01:40
big time to the communist bloc, to China
00:01:44
and Russia,
00:01:46
and is,
00:01:47
involved with this BRICS effort to actually destroy
00:01:51
our dollar.
00:01:52
And, of course, this is the problem with
00:01:54
South Africa. We've had nothing but communists
00:01:57
running it ever since
00:02:00
white rule was ended
00:02:03
many years ago back in the nineties.
00:02:06
But this put a few things on my
00:02:08
mind.
00:02:09
This
00:02:11
Trump's effort to
00:02:13
make sure the president of South Africa was
00:02:16
educated
00:02:18
about something he damn well knows about, which
00:02:20
is the persecution
00:02:21
of white people
00:02:23
in his country and specifically
00:02:25
of the Boers,
00:02:27
the Dutch descendants,
00:02:30
who are the majority of white people in
00:02:33
South Africa, not a majority of the people
00:02:35
there, obviously.
00:02:38
But
00:02:39
so it put a few topics on my
00:02:41
mind
00:02:42
watching this play out,
00:02:44
Like the worldwide war on white people,
00:02:47
as an example.
00:02:49
Like the corporate communist plot
00:02:52
that took South Africa
00:02:54
away
00:02:55
from the ruling Boers,
00:02:58
the Dutch
00:02:59
Reform people,
00:03:01
and put it into the hands,
00:03:03
essentially,
00:03:04
sorry about this folks, of the savages, but
00:03:07
we're talking about savage
00:03:09
communists
00:03:11
as much as we are about savage
00:03:14
native Africans.
00:03:16
Like the lies of too many,
00:03:18
conservatives
00:03:19
believe
00:03:21
about events like those that occurred in the
00:03:23
recent history of South Africa.
00:03:26
Oh, Nelson Mandela. Boy, he's just the greatest
00:03:29
guy in the world.
00:03:30
Folks, he was not the greatest guy in
00:03:33
the world. He was a communist stooge.
00:03:36
Like the rest of the so called leaders
00:03:38
that have been put in power essentially by
00:03:40
the West,
00:03:42
with
00:03:43
sometimes the machinations
00:03:45
of the Russians and the Chinese
00:03:47
in all of these countries in Africa.
00:03:52
So today, I want to discuss Southern Africa
00:03:53
a little bit, and we might as it
00:03:59
was
00:04:04
Memorial
00:04:06
Day last year, if I remember
00:04:07
correctly,
00:04:08
it was Memorial Day last year, if I
00:04:10
remember correctly,
00:04:12
Memorial Day period,
00:04:14
I did a entire episode on Vietnam,
00:04:17
on the origins
00:04:19
of the Vietnam conflict,
00:04:22
excuse me, and
00:04:24
about
00:04:25
some of the aspects of that conflict, which
00:04:28
included
00:04:29
colonialism. Vietnam was a colony,
00:04:32
part of a colony called French Indochina,
00:04:36
who was controlled by France,
00:04:39
prior
00:04:41
to several events that occurred that are covered
00:04:43
in that episode, like a big war
00:04:46
in Vietnam.
00:04:49
So today, I don't want to talk about
00:04:51
Vietnam per se, but about
00:04:53
South Africa, but in the lens of a
00:04:55
little bit longer conversation about colonialism,
00:05:00
which folks you may or may not be
00:05:02
in the loop on this, depends on if
00:05:04
you've been on a university
00:05:05
campus
00:05:07
as a student in the last few years,
00:05:10
but colonialism,
00:05:12
ladies and gentlemen, is the most evil thing
00:05:14
in the world,
00:05:16
along with all the other things
00:05:19
that white people
00:05:21
have done in history that they call attention
00:05:26
to. As the Jewish alleged scholar Susan Sontag
00:05:30
assured us many years ago,
00:05:32
the white race is the cancer of history.
00:05:37
Now, I don't actually believe that and I
00:05:39
hope to God you don't,
00:05:41
but there is a whole lot of people
00:05:43
that do believe it and are inculcating
00:05:45
our youth
00:05:47
with that idea.
00:05:49
And a whole lot of our youth and
00:05:51
people that are not our youth,
00:05:53
people that actually unfortunately start in the baby
00:05:56
boomer level
00:05:58
of age, which includes my own age
00:06:02
group, but a lot of these people believe
00:06:05
that.
00:06:06
They believe that because every evil thing that
00:06:09
seems to happen
00:06:10
seems to be caused by white people.
00:06:14
And so colonialism
00:06:15
is definitely
00:06:16
put in that category
00:06:22
because
00:06:23
it was white people that administered
00:06:25
colonies,
00:06:27
the colonial
00:06:28
system,
00:06:30
as it was known,
00:06:33
up until,
00:06:35
really, up until the end of World War
00:06:37
Two.
00:06:39
And many colonies lasted longer than that, but
00:06:41
the system
00:06:43
was breaking down by that time.
00:06:48
So,
00:06:51
as part of the Marxist Plague that's in
00:06:53
our midst,
00:06:55
both the Fabian Socialist, the gradualist
00:06:59
suit and tie
00:07:01
Marxist variety and the Bolshevik iteration
00:07:05
of that disease,
00:07:06
the disease of Marxism.
00:07:09
But as part of both wings of the
00:07:11
plague,
00:07:12
there is a war on white people,
00:07:16
on their nations,
00:07:19
carried on by, among other things, radical and
00:07:22
nearly unlimited immigration
00:07:25
that has occurred against nearly every white nation.
00:07:30
There's a war on the heritage of these
00:07:33
peoples,
00:07:34
their culture,
00:07:36
their Christian faith,
00:07:39
on their heroes,
00:07:42
on their very persons,
00:07:45
in too many cases and in too many
00:07:47
places.
00:07:48
Just one example, the rape
00:07:51
epidemic
00:07:52
in Britain
00:07:54
that feckless and traitorous,
00:07:58
mainly white,
00:07:59
governmental officials don't seem to want to acknowledge
00:08:02
or do a damn thing about,
00:08:04
in the case of Britain.
00:08:06
I
00:08:08
mean, just look at the core of any
00:08:10
big city
00:08:11
in the Western world,
00:08:14
in your country, in America,
00:08:17
in Britain,
00:08:19
in Paris, France, in Marseille.
00:08:25
There's a war on white people.
00:08:29
And in this process,
00:08:31
there's been a war on colonialism.
00:08:35
So, you know, what is colonialism?
00:08:37
I think we we all have a vague
00:08:39
idea or maybe a really good idea about
00:08:41
it, but colonialism, in effect,
00:08:44
was a situation where
00:08:47
people from Europe
00:08:48
and people from America, if you're going to
00:08:51
add The Philippines and
00:08:53
Puerto Rico
00:08:55
to the list of colonies,
00:08:59
Hawaii,
00:09:00
although Hawaii is now a state, but it
00:09:02
was
00:09:03
totally, it was a colony
00:09:05
when it was first habitated by white people,
00:09:08
became a colony,
00:09:11
where people
00:09:13
settle,
00:09:14
people want to be free,
00:09:16
where there's a lot of vacant land.
00:09:19
Every circumstance is different,
00:09:21
but
00:09:22
those are all circumstances
00:09:24
where
00:09:26
buccaneer types got concessions from their governments
00:09:31
to go colonize these places strictly
00:09:33
to take their resources
00:09:35
and get cheap labor to take their resources.
00:09:39
Not a good situation in that case.
00:09:43
And there's just every other mix of it.
00:09:46
You know, in the case of Vietnam, the
00:09:47
French were invited in
00:09:50
by monarchs and, of course, the Vietnamese culture,
00:09:53
the Cambodian culture, the Laotian culture,
00:09:56
which makes up what was French Indochina,
00:09:59
that colony,
00:10:01
a little bit more advanced than what you
00:10:03
find in Africa.
00:10:06
But they were actually invited in, but I'm
00:10:08
sure a lot of the people didn't want
00:10:10
them to come in as colonists, but a
00:10:11
lot did, and it's complicated.
00:10:14
The circumstances are different in almost every case,
00:10:18
and
00:10:21
the result for native peoples
00:10:24
is different in almost every individual case, because
00:10:26
a lot of native peoples got a whole
00:10:28
lot
00:10:29
out of colonialism.
00:10:31
Some got filthy rich from it.
00:10:34
Many,
00:10:35
most, almost all,
00:10:37
benefited greatly from Western medicine,
00:10:42
from Western infrastructure,
00:10:45
from Western agriculture,
00:10:48
not starving to death every other year,
00:10:52
being brought into the modern world, being brought
00:10:54
into the white people's world, let's be blunt
00:10:58
about it,
00:10:59
because of the infrastructure that was laid down
00:11:02
in these colonial
00:11:03
pursuits in every case, regardless of the other
00:11:06
circumstances
00:11:08
of the case.
00:11:11
So, you know, I'm not making any kind
00:11:13
of argument, oh, colonialism was the greatest thing
00:11:15
in the world, but I'm also not going
00:11:17
to sit there and listen
00:11:19
to this crap
00:11:20
about how it was the worst thing in
00:11:22
the world because it just wasn't, folks,
00:11:26
for the peoples
00:11:28
who were in that system.
00:11:35
Varying Circumstances.
00:11:39
There was a commercial variant of it, a
00:11:41
settler variant.
00:11:43
And, of course, now the left on the
00:11:45
campuses, they've made the word settler
00:12:00
trait
00:12:01
of the white peoples of the world
00:12:03
to go and conquer the unknown
00:12:06
and settle there and turn it into civilization.
00:12:12
And civilization,
00:12:14
I mean, we can talk about the Chinese
00:12:16
and whatnot, but basically
00:12:21
the European people's world
00:12:24
coming to your neighborhood,
00:12:26
and, of course, some people didn't like it.
00:12:28
Like I said,
00:12:30
it varied in every case.
00:12:35
Sometimes it was migration to essentially empty lands.
00:12:40
Take Kenya, for example, in Africa,
00:12:43
where the Masai tribe basically wiped out another
00:12:47
tribe that had a huge expanse
00:12:50
of land that they generally dwelt in. They
00:12:52
were wiped out.
00:12:55
That left the land a lot of vacant
00:12:57
land in Kenya.
00:12:59
And a a number of white settlers came
00:13:01
in, particularly in the highlands of Kenya,
00:13:04
to colonize
00:13:06
that area
00:13:07
and to bring civilization
00:13:10
to Kenyans,
00:13:12
to bring electricity, to bring modern medicine, to
00:13:14
bring locomotives,
00:13:18
organizations
00:13:19
in terms of shipping,
00:13:22
in terms
00:13:23
of bringing retail goods to the public, in
00:13:26
terms of processing raw materials to create wealth.
00:13:33
So
00:13:34
sometimes they were invited in, the
00:13:36
colonists,
00:13:38
the western colonists, the white colonists. Sometimes they
00:13:41
were not invited in,
00:13:43
and there were different reactions at different times
00:13:45
on the parts of these people.
00:13:48
Everything was not always great in these colonies.
00:13:52
There were people exploited. There's no doubt about
00:13:54
that.
00:13:56
And there were people who
00:13:58
were were able to advance greatly in their
00:14:00
own personal lives
00:14:02
and and as part of a society
00:14:05
because they were in a colonial society,
00:14:08
in a third world country, in an African
00:14:10
country.
00:14:13
In the in this situation that I'm
00:14:16
focusing on now.
00:14:20
So nearly the entire third world was colonized
00:14:25
by the time of the outbreak of one
00:14:28
of the biggest tragedies ever,
00:14:31
also known as the First World War.
00:14:34
And I don't want to digress too much
00:14:35
about the First World War,
00:14:37
but our president is
00:14:41
talking about memorials and all this, and and
00:14:43
that's fine.
00:14:44
I have no problem with that. I have
00:14:46
no problem about having a reverence
00:14:48
for our soldiers
00:14:51
of the past and of the present.
00:14:54
But I got a whole big problem celebrating
00:14:57
World War one. Yes. Technically,
00:15:02
we won.
00:15:04
And, of course, The United States, in some
00:15:05
ways, was benefited
00:15:07
by that victory other than by the tremendous
00:15:10
loss of life even on a part of
00:15:12
our troops that were only in the war
00:15:14
for about a year.
00:15:16
But it was an absolute
00:15:19
catastrophe
00:15:20
for Western civilization, an absolute catastrophe, and I'm
00:15:24
going to talk more about it because there
00:15:26
are things some things that need to be
00:15:27
said
00:15:28
that have been said before.
00:15:30
You know, Pat Buchanan wrote a tremendous book
00:15:34
a tremendous book
00:15:36
about the origins of World War one and
00:15:38
then of course, World War two because,
00:15:41
you know, they're linked
00:15:43
at the hip, World War one and World
00:15:45
War two. No way would the second
00:15:49
conflagration,
00:15:51
the fifty five million
00:15:54
persons dead
00:15:55
conflagration, would not have occurred if it wasn't
00:15:58
for the earlier one where only about twenty
00:16:00
million people
00:16:02
died.
00:16:03
So those things are linked. I want to
00:16:05
talk more about them.
00:16:07
We won't get into it now, but how
00:16:09
it's related to our story now is, you
00:16:12
know, really the writing was on the wall
00:16:14
after the First World War
00:16:17
as the Marxists gained more and more power
00:16:19
within Britain and within France
00:16:22
and within The United States
00:16:25
that the colonial system was going
00:16:28
to come to an end. I mean, when
00:16:30
the people running it
00:16:33
are of that mind, you know, it's not
00:16:35
going to last
00:16:37
too much longer. So nearly the entire third
00:16:41
world was colonized by the time of the
00:16:44
outbreak of the first World War. And,
00:16:48
the premier colonizers, without any doubt, leaving everyone
00:16:51
else to a degree in the shade, was
00:16:53
the were the Brits.
00:16:55
You know, the sun never set on the
00:16:57
British Empire
00:16:59
because,
00:17:01
the sun was up somewhere
00:17:03
over some colony of Britain
00:17:05
by that time, by the time of the
00:17:07
First World War, by the time of 1914.
00:17:10
And, I mean, it was incredible.
00:17:13
It was incredible that, you know, they had
00:17:15
Hong Kong in concessions in China,
00:17:19
Australia and New Zealand, and of course they
00:17:21
became independent nations, but they were colonies,
00:17:24
just like America was a colony till we
00:17:26
broke away.
00:17:28
Australia and New Zealand, India,
00:17:31
Pakistan,
00:17:32
huge countries.
00:17:33
Tremendous wealth.
00:17:35
Belize and British Guyana and Jamaica and islands
00:17:39
in the Caribbean in the
00:17:42
Western Hemisphere.
00:17:46
And I'll get to Africa in a minute,
00:17:48
where they were the dominant player there.
00:17:52
The French had French Indochina.
00:17:55
The French,
00:17:56
also a dominant player,
00:17:59
secondary, but definitely
00:18:01
dominated a huge
00:18:03
percentage of the landmass in Africa.
00:18:07
The Dutch
00:18:09
had the Dutch East Indies.
00:18:11
You probably heard of the Dutch East Indies
00:18:13
at some point.
00:18:15
That's Indonesia,
00:18:16
folks.
00:18:17
Oil rich, tremendously rich
00:18:20
in oil and very populist. I mean, there's,
00:18:22
what, 150
00:18:24
people there now? It's a huge country.
00:18:27
Indonesia, that was a Dutch colony
00:18:30
and a few others as well,
00:18:32
and these are outside of Africa now.
00:18:36
But the area I want to focus on
00:18:38
today is
00:18:39
the African Continent,
00:18:43
and with just a couple of exceptions,
00:18:47
they were
00:18:49
colonized. Africa was colonized
00:18:51
completely
00:18:53
by the time of World War one, and
00:18:54
now for our
00:18:56
viewing audience,
00:18:58
if I can pull this off, I am
00:18:59
going to show you
00:19:03
a globe
00:19:07
that my mother
00:19:09
was given in 1941,
00:19:12
and
00:19:14
she gave that to me in the early
00:19:16
nineteen sixties.
00:19:19
And there
00:19:21
is Africa
00:19:23
and all the green,
00:19:26
Algeria,
00:19:27
Ivory Coast,
00:19:29
Chad,
00:19:30
all these countries in West Africa, French colonies,
00:19:34
every one of them.
00:19:36
And then the red,
00:19:39
the red colonies, for those who can see,
00:19:42
that's Britain's colonies,
00:19:44
starting with The Sudan,
00:19:46
going down into Kenya. And you know, they
00:19:48
actually got a couple of three colonies out
00:19:50
of World War I, Tanganyika,
00:19:53
which is,
00:19:55
let me point it out, is in the
00:19:57
whoops, in the this area, Tanganyika,
00:20:01
Kenya.
00:20:02
And then you come down to Northern Rhodesia
00:20:06
and to what is now Zimbabwe to Rhodesia,
00:20:10
right here, which is now Zimbabwe,
00:20:12
Southwest Africa, that was German, the British got
00:20:15
it, and then of course
00:20:16
South Africa.
00:20:18
Those were all British
00:20:20
colonies. In Madagascar, that huge island
00:20:23
off the East shore there, also French, it's
00:20:26
in green.
00:20:27
And then there
00:20:28
was a kind of gray colored colonies down
00:20:31
there.
00:20:32
You have Angola,
00:20:34
huge.
00:20:35
And right across from Angola,
00:20:37
Mozambique. Those are Portuguese
00:20:39
colonies.
00:20:40
They had another one up here. Portugal
00:20:43
also had one in West Africa.
00:20:45
So, you know, you see Liberia
00:20:47
there in yellow
00:20:48
in West Africa.
00:20:50
You see Egypt
00:20:51
and you see Ethiopia.
00:20:54
Those are the only areas that are not
00:20:56
colonies
00:20:57
of a European power
00:21:00
in at the time of this is the
00:21:02
time just before World War two. This is
00:21:04
1941.
00:21:06
So the entire,
00:21:09
continent,
00:21:10
was colonized.
00:21:14
And,
00:21:16
so definitely
00:21:18
a stage
00:21:20
from which we can evaluate
00:21:22
and take a look at colonialism.
00:21:26
And in the heart, I didn't mention this.
00:21:28
I may be shit because I'm gonna be
00:21:29
talking a lot about it in the next
00:21:31
half of the show right there.
00:21:34
The Belgian
00:21:35
Congo.
00:21:36
Huge.
00:21:37
Huge. In the heart of Africa as they
00:21:40
always said.
00:21:41
You know, you can you know, Tarzan, I
00:21:43
think he was always in The Congo. He
00:21:44
was in
00:21:45
the heart of Africa,
00:21:48
with the native folks there. That was owned
00:21:50
by Belgium.
00:21:52
That was a Belgian
00:21:53
colony.
00:21:57
So the Communists,
00:22:00
from the time they acquired any level of
00:22:02
power,
00:22:04
trained their eyes on the Third World
00:22:07
and on the colonies
00:22:10
of the world, if you will,
00:22:12
as did the Fabian socialists
00:22:14
in Britain
00:22:16
and all their brothers and sisters in gradualist
00:22:19
suit and tie Marxism
00:22:21
in
00:22:22
France and in Germany and in all these
00:22:24
other places
00:22:27
over the years.
00:22:29
But
00:22:31
initially, the British Fabians
00:22:35
saw
00:22:35
the Empire as a big advantage for them
00:22:40
because
00:22:41
they saw
00:22:42
it as a as a transmission
00:22:44
belt
00:22:45
for Marxism to be spread all over the
00:22:48
world as they
00:22:50
gained more and more power in Britain through
00:22:52
first the Labour Party
00:22:54
and then to a degree through all the
00:22:56
parties, through the London School of Economics and
00:22:59
through all their Marxist professors,
00:23:01
there at the Fabian Society in Britain. So,
00:23:05
you know, they were totally
00:23:06
against colonialism, but not really
00:23:09
initially.
00:23:10
And, you know, John Ruskin, way back in
00:23:12
the late eighteen hundreds, kind of a precursor
00:23:15
of the Fabians, a Marxist,
00:23:17
a buddy of Karl Marx, who was in
00:23:18
Britain at this time, by the way,
00:23:22
he lectured on the importance
00:23:24
of the British Empire not to extract goods
00:23:28
and make people like the Rothschilds
00:23:30
extremely rich,
00:23:32
which the colonies did in South Africa.
00:23:36
Cecil Rhodes, an agent of the Rothschilds,
00:23:40
there in Southern Africa. But as,
00:23:44
as this,
00:23:45
the ability to have beachheads all over the
00:23:47
world
00:23:48
just through where the Brits
00:23:51
were flying their flag.
00:23:53
And now you can see, you know, I'm
00:23:54
looking at the map up here a little
00:23:56
further. I mean, Iraq at this time, British.
00:24:00
You know,
00:24:01
part of Saudi Arabia, British. The I mean,
00:24:04
the Brits were everywhere. Look at India and
00:24:06
then Pakistan,
00:24:08
Australia,
00:24:09
half of, New Guinea,
00:24:11
and the the yellow there is the Dutch
00:24:14
East Indies.
00:24:15
But, you know, and they had some control
00:24:17
there in Malaysia and in Singapore.
00:24:20
Also, the Brits. I didn't mention that a
00:24:22
minute ago. But anyway,
00:24:24
sun never set on the British Empire, a
00:24:26
tremendous situation for them.
00:24:29
And we're gonna talk more about colonialism and
00:24:32
about
00:24:32
specifically the Belgian Congo
00:24:35
right after the news. You're listening to Hour
00:24:38
of Decision on Liberty News Radio.
00:25:00
Against tyranny and corruption for Christ in constitution,
00:25:04
the second half of Hour of Decision
00:25:07
with Lou Moore starts now.
00:25:15
Welcome back to Hour of Decision. My name
00:25:18
is Lou Moore.
00:25:19
We've been talking about colonialism, folks. Been talking,
00:25:23
about,
00:25:26
the pattern of colonialism,
00:25:28
the phenomena
00:25:29
a bit.
00:25:31
And, you know, one of the
00:25:34
things that is happening by the beginning of
00:25:36
the twentieth century, as I said, most of
00:25:38
the third world, not all of it, but
00:25:40
most of the third world and almost all
00:25:42
of Africa
00:25:44
is now under the sway of colonialism,
00:25:47
which means they're under the sway of the
00:25:48
Western powers.
00:25:51
And one result of this is the third
00:25:53
world population
00:25:55
is
00:25:56
exploding.
00:25:58
It's exploding. It's much larger than it was
00:26:02
years earlier before
00:26:04
modern medicine in a systemic
00:26:07
systematic way,
00:26:09
was introduced into these areas before
00:26:12
a phalanx of Christian missionaries
00:26:15
poured
00:26:16
across these various areas in Asia, and now
00:26:19
we're talking about Africa.
00:26:23
And so, you know, this is what prompts
00:26:25
the book by a author of Stoddard that
00:26:26
was writ written at the turn of the
00:26:28
century, turn of the twentieth
00:26:30
century, the rising tide of color.
00:26:33
You've heard me mention this book,
00:26:35
two or three times on hour of decision,
00:26:39
and this is a new phenomena in the
00:26:41
world.
00:26:42
And so then by by the end of
00:26:44
World War one,
00:26:45
you know, the western powers
00:26:47
have
00:26:49
destroyed each other, essentially, with the exception of
00:26:52
The United States, which ends up on top
00:26:54
of the heap
00:26:55
in terms of the world and in terms,
00:26:57
certainly of western of the western powers of
00:26:59
the white nations
00:27:00
in
00:27:01
the world.
00:27:03
And so,
00:27:05
you have this huge rise
00:27:08
of population, of healthy
00:27:10
populations
00:27:12
in places where they now receive regular health
00:27:15
care, where they are receiving
00:27:17
some form of education, where they're getting more
00:27:19
nutritious food, where all these things are in
00:27:22
a system, in a colonial system, and it
00:27:26
works better in some areas than others, and
00:27:28
it's more humane in some areas than others.
00:27:30
Every case is different, but that's the general
00:27:32
trend of it. And so their populations
00:27:35
are exploding.
00:27:38
I mentioned I talked about the fact that
00:27:40
the baby in socialist in Britain, and this
00:27:42
all this goes for The United States, this
00:27:44
also goes for the leftists,
00:27:46
the suit and tie leftists in France,
00:27:49
and in the twenties in Weimar,
00:27:51
Germany,
00:27:52
and in some of these other countries.
00:27:54
They're,
00:27:55
you know, they are now pivoting away,
00:27:59
completely away
00:28:01
from any support of the colonial system. Before,
00:28:03
a lot of the lefty Brits were supporting
00:28:06
colonialism
00:28:07
because they saw it as a way to
00:28:09
more quickly spread their gospel
00:28:12
and to take even more power unto themselves
00:28:15
in the beginning of a world government arguably
00:28:17
was just having control of the British Empire.
00:28:20
I mean,
00:28:21
pretty good argument could be made that way
00:28:23
as many countries
00:28:25
as were impacted and were flying the Union
00:28:28
Jack,
00:28:30
as colonies
00:28:31
during this time. But by the end of
00:28:33
World War one, there was all this talk
00:28:35
of self determination,
00:28:36
all this,
00:28:39
idealistic
00:28:40
drivel
00:28:41
from,
00:28:43
Woodrow Wilson,
00:28:45
that that
00:28:46
nobody bought into. Everybody still want to carve
00:28:49
up the world and have their share. But
00:28:51
nonetheless, these ideas now, the globalists
00:28:54
are starting to promote
00:28:56
this idea that these colonies are bad, bad,
00:28:59
bad, bad, and we have to, end the
00:29:01
colonial system.
00:29:03
So that doesn't happen overnight,
00:29:05
and there's a lot of resistance to it.
00:29:08
Even Winston Churchill
00:29:10
was very resistant to it.
00:29:12
But if you listen to my World War
00:29:14
two episodes,
00:29:16
you know
00:29:17
that Franklin Delano Roosevelt pretty much laid down
00:29:20
the law to Churchill
00:29:22
when he agreed to,
00:29:24
you know, eventually come into the war on
00:29:26
British side on on the British side against
00:29:28
the National Socialist
00:29:29
Germans.
00:29:31
And,
00:29:32
you know, our condition really was getting rid
00:29:35
of the empire. Wilson, Roosevelt was
00:29:38
all about getting rid of the French empire,
00:29:41
the British empire, the Portuguese empire, the Dutch
00:29:44
empire, the Belgian empire,
00:29:47
etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. And now all these countries
00:29:50
are weakened
00:29:52
and are much weaker
00:29:54
at the end of World War two. There
00:29:55
is The United States, and, you know, we
00:29:57
got into that Spanish American war,
00:30:01
a provocation of the the exploding
00:30:03
of the, USS Maine,
00:30:06
which was probably a rigged deal, and we
00:30:08
ended up going to war against Spain. And
00:30:10
we pretty much just took over their colonies,
00:30:13
The Philippines.
00:30:15
We gave Cuba their, quote, unquote, independence,
00:30:18
although Marxists will point out impolitely,
00:30:21
the control of our corporations
00:30:23
over Cuba to a great degree. We also
00:30:26
got,
00:30:27
the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico
00:30:31
in the Caribbean. But, so we actually were
00:30:35
late, but we actually joined
00:30:37
the colonial thing.
00:30:39
And, you know, we kept The Philippines until
00:30:41
after World War two when,
00:30:43
the Japanese had attacked The Philippines in World
00:30:46
War two. They were attacking American
00:30:49
soil, American colony.
00:30:51
And,
00:30:53
so we were involved to some degree. But,
00:30:55
anyway,
00:30:57
so there's already a shifting of the sands
00:31:00
as far as colonialism and a weakening,
00:31:04
excuse me, of the colonial powers, and there
00:31:06
is the rise
00:31:08
of world communism.
00:31:10
There's the rise of Fabian socialism
00:31:12
or gradual,
00:31:14
Marxism
00:31:15
in all of the western democracies,
00:31:18
principally in Britain and in The United States,
00:31:21
but there is also the rise of The
00:31:23
USSR
00:31:24
and of the Comintern,
00:31:26
the world body
00:31:28
that began to meet in Russia
00:31:31
with, the open intent of conquering every one
00:31:36
of these areas,
00:31:38
or
00:31:39
what will become newly freed
00:31:42
nations,
00:31:43
and make it all part of their version
00:31:45
of the one world government.
00:31:47
And so you now have communist intriguers, you
00:31:49
have communist agents
00:31:52
all over the globe. You've got guys like
00:31:54
Ho Chi Minh,
00:31:55
who ended up to become the communist dictator
00:31:58
of Vietnam,
00:32:00
who had been arrested over 200 times
00:32:03
all over the world, all over the French
00:32:05
world because
00:32:07
he was a French subject as being part
00:32:10
of the French colony
00:32:11
of French Indochina,
00:32:14
before it became Vietnam, before they were able
00:32:16
to break away.
00:32:18
And,
00:32:19
and so you have characters like this all
00:32:21
over the place, and they're going to school
00:32:23
in,
00:32:25
Moscow,
00:32:27
as Ho Chi Minh did, as Mao Zedong
00:32:30
did,
00:32:31
as others did. And then they're fanning out
00:32:33
across the globe, in a lot of cases,
00:32:35
into these third world colonial
00:32:38
nations.
00:32:39
So this becomes a new dynamic
00:32:41
after World one World War one, between World
00:32:43
War one and World War two. And then
00:32:45
World War two, as I said,
00:32:49
Roosevelt is openly talking about breaking up all
00:32:51
empires. Now not the communist empire
00:32:54
that that, that had already been created by
00:32:57
the, union
00:33:00
of all those socialist republics that weren't Russia,
00:33:03
you know, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan
00:33:05
and, you know, the Ukraine,
00:33:07
and all of these areas around Russia
00:33:10
that were essentially being run-in
00:33:12
many ways as colonies by the mother Russia,
00:33:15
which was under the complete thrall
00:33:18
of,
00:33:20
communism as the seat of world communism.
00:33:24
But,
00:33:25
anyway, Roosevelt was not talking about that, and,
00:33:28
of course, he was single handedly,
00:33:31
the most responsible of anyone on the planet,
00:33:34
for what he set up to allow the
00:33:36
Russians to end up getting all of Eastern
00:33:39
Europe
00:33:40
and China,
00:33:41
Korea,
00:33:42
Mongolia,
00:33:43
Manchuria,
00:33:44
and parts
00:33:46
of Southeast Asia
00:33:48
in French Indochina.
00:33:50
And so that's a little different kind of
00:33:52
colonialism, but that doesn't count folks. Just ask
00:33:55
just ask your neighborhood, friendly neighborhood Marxist professor,
00:33:59
and they will tell you this does not
00:34:00
count as colonialism. This is totally different.
00:34:03
But, anyway,
00:34:04
I digress and digress on digressions. But,
00:34:08
so, anyway, the system is weakening. And then
00:34:11
after World War two, there's the formation of
00:34:14
the United Nations, and we're gonna talk more
00:34:16
about them in just a moment in South,
00:34:19
Africa, the Southern Africa.
00:34:22
And,
00:34:23
there's this push now
00:34:25
to
00:34:26
give all these people their independence.
00:34:29
And this there's the big question. Are they
00:34:31
ready? Are they ready for independence?
00:34:34
And all these leaders begin emerging. A lot
00:34:36
of them in the British colonies coming right
00:34:39
out
00:34:40
of the, you know, the London School of
00:34:42
Economics,
00:34:42
out of Oxford,
00:34:44
you know, right out of the classrooms of
00:34:46
Fabian socialist professors.
00:34:48
They hate the West. They love Marxism.
00:34:51
They're very,
00:34:52
copacetic,
00:34:53
sympathetic
00:34:54
with all of the third world revolutions
00:34:58
or the,
00:34:59
wars for national liberation,
00:35:01
which is all the conflicts that the Russians
00:35:04
are provoking
00:35:05
and stoking
00:35:07
around the globe around these various
00:35:11
former colonial peoples.
00:35:13
So these nations now are beginning either to
00:35:15
fight
00:35:17
for their, quote, unquote, independence,
00:35:20
like Algeria,
00:35:22
John f Kennedy's favorite third world, Marxist,
00:35:25
revolutionaries,
00:35:26
Ben Bella in Algeria,
00:35:28
a former French colony at the north part
00:35:31
of Northwest
00:35:32
Africa.
00:35:33
You know, there's what's, situation in Vietnam.
00:35:37
But in every case, these guys are fighting.
00:35:39
They said, we're not communist. Oh, no. No.
00:35:41
That's the same thing Castro said. Oh, we
00:35:44
are not communist. Let me tell you. We're
00:35:46
just freedom fighters. We're kind of like George
00:35:48
Washington was,
00:35:49
fighting the colonists,
00:35:51
colonists,
00:35:53
you know, being
00:35:55
opposed by the revolutionaries, you know, trying to
00:35:57
equate our revolution in some way,
00:36:00
completely different in every regard
00:36:04
with now the emergence
00:36:06
of these third world,
00:36:07
leaders and the emergence of third world nations.
00:36:11
So in Africa, in particular, folks,
00:36:14
as these nations begin to become independent, it
00:36:17
is an unmitigated
00:36:19
disaster.
00:36:20
You know,
00:36:21
Ghana was one of the first countries in
00:36:23
West Africa, a British colony
00:36:25
kind of surrounded by French colonies there in
00:36:27
West Africa.
00:36:30
And then they had a guy named Kwame
00:36:31
Nkrumah
00:36:32
there, and he was supposed to be the
00:36:34
greatest guy in the world. I think he
00:36:35
went to Harvard and, yeah, for, you know,
00:36:37
perfect,
00:36:39
you know, grades and education and all this.
00:36:41
And, you know, he gets to this country
00:36:43
and he just starts looting it mercilessly.
00:36:46
And this is the thing with a lot
00:36:47
of these emerging African leaders is the communist
00:36:50
found that they didn't have to train them
00:36:54
in Marxist economics or even in the tactics
00:36:57
and the thinking of the communist manifesto.
00:36:59
They just needed to hand them a bunch
00:37:01
of luxury goods and some women, and they
00:37:04
were off to the races. And a place
00:37:06
where this was so true, because I'm not
00:37:08
gonna pivot
00:37:10
to an example of, you know, we're talking
00:37:12
about colonialism kind of vaguely and in general.
00:37:14
I wanna talk now about the Belgian colony
00:37:17
of The Congo,
00:37:19
which was in the middle of all this
00:37:21
ferment of we need to be independent and
00:37:23
all this. And the, brain dead leadership in
00:37:26
Belgium said, oh, yes. These people, I think
00:37:28
they're ready for independence.
00:37:30
And, of course, they hand the government over
00:37:32
to a guy named
00:37:34
Patrice
00:37:35
Lamumba,
00:37:36
a former petty thief,
00:37:38
a a thoroughgoing
00:37:40
Marxist,
00:37:41
although people said he was really just more
00:37:43
of a partier,
00:37:45
liked a lot of women, and really liked
00:37:46
all the largesse he was getting from the
00:37:49
communist world.
00:37:51
But he took over,
00:37:53
the central government,
00:37:54
what became the central government in The Congo,
00:37:57
and the Belgians
00:37:59
leave.
00:38:01
They leave him in charge, but there's only
00:38:02
one thing, folks.
00:38:04
All these countries in Africa, Ezra and Asia
00:38:06
to a degree, but much less so. In
00:38:09
Africa,
00:38:10
all the infrastructure
00:38:11
is run by white people. All the railways,
00:38:14
the utilities,
00:38:16
the the the food, supply chain,
00:38:19
the supply chain of other goods,
00:38:22
All of these things, and then the big
00:38:24
industries that,
00:38:26
provided revenue,
00:38:28
for these areas and these newly
00:38:31
minted nations,
00:38:33
like Ghana, like Nigeria,
00:38:35
like The Congo,
00:38:37
you know, this is all white people, folks.
00:38:40
And,
00:38:41
but,
00:38:43
the revolutionary
00:38:44
ferment
00:38:45
that, is being whipped up in a lot
00:38:47
of these places, like The Congo,
00:38:50
you know, The first thing they wanted to
00:38:52
do there is massacre all the whites as
00:38:54
soon as Lumumba got in power, and they
00:38:56
started slaughtering the whites.
00:38:58
So the Belgians come back. They have to
00:39:00
come back
00:39:01
to protect all these Belgian people. Most of
00:39:04
them,
00:39:05
a huge percentage of these people now were
00:39:08
born in The Congo.
00:39:10
That's the thing. This is generational. I mean,
00:39:12
in South Africa,
00:39:13
the Boers,
00:39:14
they go back three hundred years, folks,
00:39:17
that there are Boers that have been in
00:39:19
South Africa a hell of a lot longer
00:39:21
than any of your ancestors have been in
00:39:23
America.
00:39:25
White people.
00:39:26
And so, you know, this is a further
00:39:28
complexity to this whole issue, particularly when we
00:39:30
talk about Africa.
00:39:32
But,
00:39:33
so there were people in The Congo,
00:39:36
former Belgian colony, now independent, and this is
00:39:39
in 1960,
00:39:41
in 1961,
00:39:44
that,
00:39:45
that,
00:39:46
you you know, these people are being slaughtered,
00:39:48
so the Belgians have to come back in
00:39:50
to maintain order.
00:39:52
There are marches in the streets in,
00:39:54
like Leopoldville.
00:39:55
They don't call it that now. They used
00:39:57
to call it Leopoldville the capital of the
00:39:59
Congo,
00:40:00
demanding they come back in because a lot
00:40:02
of the African people didn't like all this
00:40:04
disorder either, and there's already,
00:40:07
starvation breaking out. The food food
00:40:10
supply,
00:40:11
chains are being disrupted.
00:40:13
The place is going to hell in a
00:40:15
handbasket
00:40:15
at a rapid rate.
00:40:17
But Lumumba is, not an idiot,
00:40:21
and he understands
00:40:22
that his best route now is to appeal
00:40:25
to the world, to
00:40:27
our state department,
00:40:28
to John f Kennedy,
00:40:31
and to the Russians, and to the United
00:40:33
Nations.
00:40:35
So he talks the United Nations
00:40:37
into coming into The Congo,
00:40:40
guns blazing.
00:40:42
And then they send in Irish troops, Swedish
00:40:44
troops, and also African troops, and I don't
00:40:46
remember from where now. There are also African
00:40:49
troops and Indian,
00:40:51
as in India. Indian troops come in.
00:40:55
They're not nice.
00:40:57
They push the Belgians back out.
00:40:59
But
00:41:01
meanwhile, in the southern part
00:41:04
of The Congo,
00:41:06
there is a province called Katanga.
00:41:08
And I talked about Katanga when I talked
00:41:11
about John f Kennedy
00:41:12
because, ladies and gentlemen, every patriot in The
00:41:15
United States when John f Kennedy was president
00:41:18
knew damn well what was happening in Contega.
00:41:21
It was on the news every day,
00:41:23
the John Birch Society, the Young Americans for
00:41:26
Freedom,
00:41:26
Williamette Buckley, everybody
00:41:29
back in the day
00:41:30
was talking about Katanga because Katanga
00:41:34
was run by an elected
00:41:37
Christian
00:41:38
Methodist African man named Moise Shambhay.
00:41:41
There were a lot of white people there
00:41:43
because there was a lot of mining industry
00:41:45
and all this infrastructure I was telling you
00:41:47
about. They had universities
00:41:49
there, but it was an extremely
00:41:52
well run place.
00:41:53
No violence.
00:41:55
No racial violence.
00:41:57
The the universities were filled with African students,
00:42:00
with white
00:42:01
professors,
00:42:03
and the place was just operating on another
00:42:06
level and and moving up
00:42:08
in the world. And while the Congo,
00:42:10
the rest of it was going to hell
00:42:12
in a hand basket
00:42:14
under the leadership of Marxists,
00:42:17
who were getting arms, surreptitiously
00:42:19
from Czechoslovakia,
00:42:20
which is really from Russia.
00:42:21
And anyway, and then they called the UN
00:42:24
in, and Kennedy
00:42:26
financed
00:42:27
this UN operation
00:42:28
where they
00:42:30
slaughtered
00:42:31
thousands
00:42:32
of people
00:42:33
trying to get Katanga
00:42:35
back into the Congo because,
00:42:38
the the you know, Katanga was not playing
00:42:40
the new world order game. They were not
00:42:43
playing the communist game.
00:42:45
Shambhay was a militant
00:42:47
he was a Christian, a militant anti communist.
00:42:50
He had a lot of whites right in
00:42:51
the government. He was not shy about that,
00:42:54
not afraid of it.
00:42:56
The white people loved him down there. His
00:42:58
own people loved him. I there I mean,
00:43:00
there's footage, rallies, thousands of people. I mean,
00:43:03
they are on fire for this guy. He's
00:43:05
very charismatic.
00:43:07
And
00:43:08
so he leads a succession movement,
00:43:11
to get them away from the chaos going
00:43:13
on in the rest of the Congo.
00:43:16
The problem is that's not in the new
00:43:18
world order plan.
00:43:20
The UN is backing The US, the Russians,
00:43:24
the Brits,
00:43:25
the Belgians,
00:43:27
not so much the Belgians, but,
00:43:29
all the large nations, the major nations of
00:43:32
the United Nations were backing Lumumba,
00:43:35
and then,
00:43:36
he dies mysteriously.
00:43:38
Now they're saying today they're saying that Shambe's
00:43:41
people killed him, but I don't believe that.
00:43:43
And that's not what was reported at the
00:43:45
time.
00:43:46
But, they send the UN troops in, and
00:43:49
there were three major attacks on Katanga
00:43:52
by UN forces
00:43:54
where they
00:43:55
slaughtered
00:43:56
thousands
00:43:57
of white people. They slaughtered people in Red
00:44:00
Cross ambulances.
00:44:01
They leveled
00:44:02
hospitals.
00:44:03
They killed
00:44:05
many thousand
00:44:06
native people there
00:44:08
trying to force Katanga
00:44:10
back into this Marxist state,
00:44:13
that, and Marxist disaster
00:44:16
that was the Congo. And, you know, Herbert
00:44:18
Hoover
00:44:20
spoke out against this. William f Buckley spoke
00:44:22
out against of course, the Birch Society was
00:44:24
on fire against this thing because they were
00:44:26
saying this showed the real nature of the
00:44:29
United Nations.
00:44:30
United Nations says we're just there for peace
00:44:32
and
00:44:33
peacekeeping,
00:44:34
and we don't wanna interfere with the local
00:44:36
people.
00:44:37
It couldn't have been farther from the truth,
00:44:39
folks, what happened in there. It was just
00:44:42
the opposite.
00:44:43
And so here you have a a case
00:44:45
study of, you know, is a country ready
00:44:49
to be independent?
00:44:50
Well, in this case,
00:44:52
you had black people working with white people.
00:44:55
You
00:44:56
had universities,
00:44:57
full,
00:44:58
k through 12 education.
00:45:00
You had, you know, every supply chain working
00:45:03
great.
00:45:04
Every health indicator,
00:45:06
great.
00:45:06
Crime, low.
00:45:09
Elections and, you know, all these countries are
00:45:11
so corrupt. I mean, I didn't get into
00:45:13
that. I mean, the corruption level the corruption
00:45:15
level in the entire third world
00:45:18
is off the charts compared to what we're
00:45:20
used to. I mean, let me just be
00:45:21
blunt. And everybody that's ever done business in
00:45:24
any third world country,
00:45:26
knows that.
00:45:27
And corruption is getting worse in this country,
00:45:30
getting worse in Europe, but
00:45:32
corruption is endemic and just part of the
00:45:35
culture. In Mexico, it's just,
00:45:38
the bite. You always gotta pay the bite
00:45:40
to do anything.
00:45:42
And, you know, in Africa, off the charts.
00:45:45
Off the charts.
00:45:47
But,
00:45:48
it was reasonably
00:45:50
better
00:45:51
in Katanga
00:45:52
than anywhere else in Africa,
00:45:54
and they're independent now. They're actually an they're
00:45:57
operating as an independent country.
00:45:59
So, anyhow,
00:46:01
the UN wasn't having it. And finally, after
00:46:05
the third major attack
00:46:07
where they have they have brought in a
00:46:08
ton of armament, and then the Russians brought
00:46:10
in a ton of armament surreptitiously
00:46:12
through Czechoslovakia,
00:46:15
to the central government.
00:46:17
So the central government, with the UN,
00:46:20
went in and just slaughtered a ton of
00:46:22
people in Katanga, and there is all kinds
00:46:24
of witnesses of it.
00:46:27
New York Times reporters, at that time, they
00:46:29
weren't all completely bought off. Anyway, the best
00:46:32
book on this, folks, without any doubt,
00:46:34
if you're interested in that, and I have
00:46:36
it here, it's by g Edward Griffin.
00:46:39
Remember that name? The guy that wrote The
00:46:41
Creature from Jekyll Island.
00:46:43
This is a book he wrote several years
00:46:45
earlier about the UN,
00:46:48
about the evil
00:46:49
of the UN, and he knew
00:46:52
that this case study of Katanga
00:46:54
was the best example
00:46:57
of how evil
00:46:58
the UN can be, could be, and can
00:47:01
be today.
00:47:02
And that's why the first six chapters of
00:47:04
this book
00:47:06
is about Katanga,
00:47:08
and I highly recommend it. It's called The
00:47:10
Fearful Master, a second look at the United
00:47:13
Nations
00:47:14
by G. Edward Griffin, for those of you
00:47:16
who are not
00:47:17
observing me showing it
00:47:19
on the screen.
00:47:20
A great book.
00:47:23
Another book, I'm just gonna get into that
00:47:24
real quick because we're running out of time.
00:47:28
This guy, he's apologizing
00:47:30
constantly and everything, but he's a big shot,
00:47:33
ethicist in Britain named Nigel Biggar,
00:47:36
who has really,
00:47:38
upset the apple cart because
00:47:40
he has told the truth
00:47:42
to a degree
00:47:43
about what really happened in the British Empire.
00:47:46
And it's not
00:47:47
pro empire
00:47:49
by any means, but it is the most
00:47:51
honest
00:47:52
treatment and a detailed treatment,
00:47:55
that is in,
00:47:57
you know, in current
00:47:58
it's current. This book's like a year old.
00:48:00
So that's another one you might look at
00:48:02
if you're inner more interested in this topic.
00:48:05
But, folks,
00:48:08
you know, Africa is a unmitigated disaster. We
00:48:11
haven't talked even talking about South Africa. I
00:48:13
think I'm gonna have another episode on Rhodesia
00:48:16
and South Africa.
00:48:17
Two of the,
00:48:18
British and former, in case of South Africa,
00:48:21
former British colonies,
00:48:23
and talk about,
00:48:25
you know, what happened there. I mean, Rhodesia
00:48:28
had one of the another example, it was
00:48:31
run by whites,
00:48:33
but,
00:48:34
blacks were fully integrated in the economy.
00:48:37
It was a thriving place,
00:48:39
and then the Marxist came in,
00:48:41
took over, and it became Zimbabwe the worst
00:48:44
country on Earth. Hell on Earth.
00:48:47
In Zimbabwe,
00:48:49
which used to be a perfectly
00:48:51
charming country of Rhodesia
00:48:54
with racial cooperation.
00:48:56
But let's just be honest about it, folks.
00:48:58
These countries without white people, they don't make
00:49:00
it. They don't survive,
00:49:02
and that's just it. Anyway, my name is
00:49:04
Lou Moore, and you're listening to the Hour
00:49:07
of Decision
00:49:09
on Liberty News Radio.
00:49:11
And let me remind you that at securevote.news,
00:49:15
we talk about
00:49:17
all the news, all the most recent news
00:49:19
that relates to election integrity, and I highly
00:49:23
recommend it to you.
00:49:25
Again, my name is Lou Moore.
00:49:27
Until next week. See you later.


